Changes in Online Moral Discourse About Public Figures During #MeToo

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY Affective science Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1007/s42761-024-00250-4
Benjamin M. Silver, Kevin N. Ochsner
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Abstract

During the #MeToo movement, the perceived morality of public figures changed in light of sexual assault allegations against them. Here, we asked how these changes were influenced by the perceived severity of alleged actions and by how well-known and well-liked were the public figures. Perceived morality was assessed by measuring (im)moral language usage in 1.4 million tweets about 50 male public figures accused of sexual assault. Using natural language processing to analyze the tweets, we found that liking of public figures mitigated perceived immorality for less severe allegations, but had little effect on perceived immorality for more severe allegations. The persistence of negative perceptions 1 year later was related to liking and familiarity for the public figure, not allegation severity. These results suggest that in real-world contexts, we can forgive less harmful actions for people we like, but may not be able to if their actions are more harmful; over time, however, liking for others predicts lasting negative impressions of their moral misdeeds.

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#MeToo运动期间关于公众人物的网络道德话语的变化
在#MeToo运动期间,公众人物的道德观念因性侵犯指控而发生了变化。在这里,我们询问了这些变化是如何受到所指控行为的严重性以及公众人物的知名度和受欢迎程度的影响的。感知道德是通过测量50名被指控性侵犯的男性公众人物的140万条推文的道德语言使用情况来评估的。使用自然语言处理对推文进行分析,我们发现,对公众人物的喜欢减轻了对不太严重指控的不道德感知,但对更严重指控的不道德感知几乎没有影响。一年后负面认知的持续与对公众人物的喜爱和熟悉程度有关,而与指控的严重程度无关。这些结果表明,在现实世界中,我们可以原谅我们喜欢的人的伤害较小的行为,但如果他们的行为更有害,我们可能无法原谅;然而,随着时间的推移,喜欢别人预示着对他们的道德错误留下持久的负面印象。
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